Methods for assisting recovery of damaged brain and spinal cord and treating various diseases using arrays of x-ray microplanar beams

ABSTRACT

A method of assisting recovery of an injury site of the central nervous system (CNS) or treating a disease includes providing a therapeutic dose of X-ray radiation to a target volume through an array of parallel microplanar beams. The dose to treat CNS injury temporarily removes regeneration inhibitors from the irradiated site. Substantially unirradiated cells surviving between beams migrate to the in-beam portion and assist recovery. The dose may be staggered in fractions over sessions using angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays (AVIMA). Additional doses are administered by varying the orientation of the beams. The method is enhanced by injecting stem cells into the injury site. One array or the AVIMA method is applied to ablate selected cells in a target volume associated with disease for palliative or curative effect. Atrial fibrillation is treated by irradiating the atrial wall to destroy myocardial cells while continuously rotating the subject.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/054,000, filed Feb. 10, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,158,607 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.

STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT LICENSE RIGHTS

This invention was made with Government support under contract number DE-AC02-98CH10886, awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to methods for assisting recovery of the central nervous system due to an injury to spinal cord and/or brain and for treating various diseases including those affecting the central nervous system to irradiate selected cells and tissues, and more particularly to methods of using arrays of x-ray microplanar beams to assist recovery of damaged spinal cord and brain and to treat various diseases.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

An injury to a portion of the central nervous system (CNS), i.e., the spinal cord or brain, can not be healed by the same means used to treat tissue types such as bone, muscle, liver, the peripheral nervous system (PNS), and so on. An injured spinal cord, for example, does not heal and recover to become functional again, as other tissue types do. For example, severed axons at the injury site fail to reestablish synaptic connections, resulting in permanent loss of neural activity.

In addition, beginning over the first two weeks after injury, cellular changes are triggered that lead to the formation of scar tissue that acts as a barrier to prevent regeneration. For example, astrocytes, the neuroglial cells which normally provide structural support and protection to the neurons, transform into reactive astrocytes upon injury. These reactive astrocytes accumulate to form the bulk of a scar tissue that forms, which is referred to as a gliosis (or astrogliosis), and, at a later stage, as a glial scar. This gliotic tissue acts as a barrier to the reconnection of remaining uninjured tissue, including axons and neurons, and prevents regeneration of healthy neural tissue. Without regeneration and reconnection, there is no return to functionality.

Other processes that are related to the production of reactive astrocytes and may hamper the recovery are: a) production and dissipation at the injury site of axon-growth inhibiting molecules such as chondroitin-sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) and keratan-sulfate proteoglycans (KSPGs); and b) reaction of the immune system, commonly in the form of white blood cells (leukocytes) at the entrance to the injury site.

The barrier formed at the injury site consists of functional barriers or inhibitors, as well as physical barriers. For example, the astrogliosis layer that forms at the injury site, also called the junction (referring to the junction between healthy tissues), prevents the recovery of the set of systems required to restore function including formation of the microvasculature system. With the failure of early vascular recovery, catastrophic vascular collapse ensues leading to tissue cavitation and stroke-like events. The overall failure of repair of the microvasculature induces tissue collapse and a failure to bridge the junction between healthy tissues separated by the glial tissue or glial scar.

One of the only methods currently being researched to solve the problem is irradiation of the injury site with X-rays within two to three weeks after the occurrence of injury, as described, for example, in Kalderon, et al., “Structural Recovery in Lesioned Adult Mammalian Spinal Cord by X-Irradiation of the Lesion Site,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, Vol. 93, pp. 11179-11184 (October 1996), or in Kalderon, at al., “Fractionated Radiation Facilitates Repair and Functional Motor Recovery after Spinal Cord Transection in Rat.” Brain Res. Vol. 904, pp 199-207 (June 2001), both of which are incorporated herein by reference. Although the method has produced some encouraging results in laboratory animals, it has not been shown to produce substantial functional repair of the spinal cord.

Other methods have focused on limiting the functional expression of inhibitors or altering the microenvironment that prevents spontaneous regeneration. Yet others attempt to chemically ablate the inhibitory scar barrier. These methods are limited by the lack of non-invasive methods for delivery of the chemicals/compounds required to produce the effect. These methods also exhibit substantial negative “bystander” effects that are overall deleterious to the repair process, often exacerbating injury.

The central nervous system and other organs may suffer damage from disease as well as from direct injury. For example, diseases affecting the central nervous system such as multiple sclerosis, those associated with mental illness, Parkinson's disease, and epilepsy remain without a cure and have proven especially difficult to treat.

There is a need, therefore, for more successful, safe irradiation methods for assisting functional recovery of a damaged spinal cord or brain, as well as for therapeutic treatment of diseases affecting the central nervous system and other organs.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention, which addresses the needs of the prior art, relates to a method of assisting recovery of acute or chronic injury to the brain or spinal cord by irradiating the injury site with array(s) of X-ray microplanar beams. The goal of the method of the present invention is to inhibit the formation of a scar barrier formed by injury to the spinal cord or brain, and simultaneously promote the regeneration of the damaged microvasculature and glial system to produce substantial functional recovery.

The present invention includes a method of assisting recovery of an injury site of an acute or chronic injury to a brain or spinal cord of a subject. The method includes irradiating the injury site with at least one array of microbeams. Each array includes at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams in an amount and in such a spatial arrangement to allow delivery of a therapeutic dose of X-ray radiation to the injury site.

The therapeutic dose preferably includes an in-beam in-depth dose in each microbeam substantially in a range from about 30 Gy to about 500 Gy.

Preferably, the method includes irradiating the injury site using a number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays (“AVIMA”) delivered in different sessions, where each session is separated by a time interval. This method is referred to as “AVIMA with dose fractionation.” After irradiating the injury site with one of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays in one session, the remaining angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays are preferably generated by repeatedly angularly displacing either an X-ray radiation source generating the arrays or the subject about an axis of rotation through a center of the injury site and additionally irradiating a number (n−1) times, after the time interval required between irradiating sessions, to generate the number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays. The axis of rotation is parallel to the at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams.

A pattern of radiation is generated such that the angle-variable intersecting arrays intersect substantially only within the injury site. In addition, adjacent angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays are spatially separated by a displacement angle, which is preferably equal to θ/(n−1), wherein θ is predetermined by an angular access of an X-ray source generating the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays to the injury site.

The method also preferably includes angular displacement of either the source of the microbeam arrays or the subject by a non-zero integer multiple of the displacement angle between sessions. In other words, any temporal sequence of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays may be used to irradiate the injury site.

The total angular spread θ defines the total separation between arrays, and, thus, encompasses the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays. In one embodiment, the angular spread is substantially in a range of about 130 degrees to about 150 degrees.

The present invention may also include generating a set of n angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays, where each of the angle-variable intersecting arrays may be generated with the same, or a different irradiation orientation of the at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams (microplanar beams), where the possible irradiation orientations are either horizontal, vertical, or slanted (not horizontal or vertical).

In one embodiment, the set of n-angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays are generated for one irradiation orientation, either horizontal, vertical, or slanted at a particular angle. The method may also include additionally generating a second number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays, using a different irradiation orientation of the microbeams for another n sessions. Each session is separated by the time interval. The different orientations may be generated by either repositioning the multislit collimator or changing to a different multislit collimator. As a result, the injury site is irradiated for a total number 2n of sessions. Preferably, the total number 2n of sessions ranges from three (3) to thirty (30) sessions.

The subject may be positioned for irradiation treatment in one of an upright position, a side-reclined, and a slanted position. The arrays are preferably centered around a zero-angle array that impinges on the patient's back at a 90 degree angle of incidence.

The method of irradiating the injury site with AVIMA may be implemented in sessions separated by the time interval of at least twelve (12) hours to about seven (7) days.

The array(s) of the present invention preferably include a center-to-center spacing between adjacent microbeams and a thickness of each of the at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams, wherein a ratio of the center-to-center spacing to the thickness is substantially in a range of about 4 to about 16.

In one embodiment, the method includes generating the X-ray radiation with an X-ray bremsstrahlung source. The microbeams in the array(s) generated with the bremsstrahlung source preferably have a thickness substantially in a range of about 0.1 millimeters (mm) to about 1.0 mm. Alternatively, the method may include generating synchrotron X-ray radiation, in which case, each of the at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams include a beam thickness substantially in a range of about 20 micrometers (μm) to about 100 μm.

In another embodiment, the thickness of the microbeams is substantially in a range of from about 0.02 mm (20 μm) to 1.0 mm.

The preferred X-ray radiation from a source generating the microbeam arrays has a filtered broad beam energy spectrum, with a half-power energy being substantially in a range from at least about 100 keV to about 250 keV.

In an additional embodiment of the method of the present invention, the method further includes delivering stem cells to the injury site.

The method may also include delivering the microbeam array(s) of the present invention to the injury site in a plurality of temporally discrete pulses of X-ray radiation, which are, in one embodiment, substantially synchronized with a physiomechanical cycle of the subject. Preferably, the physiomechanical cycle includes at least one of a cardiac cycle and a cardiopulmonary cycle.

The present invention also relates to a method of delivering a therapeutic dose for a curative or palliative effect to selected cell types in a target volume to treat a subject for a particular disease or condition. The method includes irradiating selected cells in a target volume of a subject with at least one array of microbeams having at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams in an amount and spatially arranged to deliver a therapeutic dose of X-ray radiation to the selected cells. The target volume is defined by the spatial arrangement of the microbeams. At least a portion of the selected cells are ablated for a palliative or a curative effect on a subject suffering from the particular disease or condition associated with the selected cells without inducing necrosis in surrounding healthy tissue.

In one embodiment, the method further includes administering external stem cells, immune cells, or a combination thereof to the target volume.

In another embodiment, the irradiating step includes delivering the therapeutic dose with the at least one array of microbeams to the target volume repeatedly in a number n of sessions, adjacent sessions being separated by a time interval. Preferably, the at least one array comprises a number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays, and the method further comprises generating the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays.

In yet another embodiment, the generating step includes irradiating the target volume with one of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays in a first session, and angularly displacing at least one of an X-ray radiation source generating the at least one array and the subject about an axis of rotation through the target volume to produce a second one of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays. The axis of rotation is parallel to the at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams. The generating step further includes additionally irradiating the target volume with the second one of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays after the time interval in a second session, and repeating the angularly displacing and additionally irradiating steps a number (n−1) of times to generate the number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays. The number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays intersect substantially only within the target volume.

The disease or condition that can be treated includes multiple sclerosis, Devic syndrome, Balo disease, Marchiafava-Bignami disease, central pontine myelinolysis, adrenoleukodystrophy, schizophrenia, macular degeneration, fibrosis, diseases of the bone, atrial fibrillation, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, pain, and psychiatric disorders.

Another method of the present invention includes delivering a therapeutic dose to selected cells in a target volume for treating a subject for atrial fibrillation. The method includes irradiating selected cells within a target volume of a subject with at least one microplanar beam having a therapeutic dose sufficient to ablate myocardial cells in an atrial wall without causing necrosis in a microvasculature system of the atrial wall. The irradiating step includes rotating the subject around an axis produced by an intersection of the microplanar beam with the atrial wall while continuously irradiating the atrial wall. Either a single microplanar beam or an array of parallel, spatially distinct microplanar beams may be used.

As a result, the present invention provides a method for assisting recovery of acute or chronic brain injury to the brain or spinal cord, and for treating various diseases for a palliative or curative effect using microplanar beams of radiation to irradiate selected cells.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of the cross-section of a microbeam array of the present invention irradiating an injured spinal cord.

FIG. 2 is a magnified perspective representation of part of the microbeam array of FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 is a top cross-section view through the injury site of FIG. 1, including a schematic representation of two angularly displaced exposures of the injured spinal cord with the microbeam array in accordance with an embodiment of a method of the present invention.

FIG. 4 is a top cross-section view through the injury site of FIG. 1, including a schematic representation of three angularly displaced exposures of the injured spinal cord with the microbeam array in accordance with an embodiment of a method of the present invention.

FIG. 5 is a schematic representation of a cross-section of a single microbeam array of the present invention irradiating a target volume that includes selected types of cells associated with a particular disease.

FIG. 6 is a schematic representation of two angularly displaced exposures of the target volume of FIG. 5 in accordance with an embodiment of a method of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides a method of assisting physiological, neurological, and functional recovery of a damaged spinal cord or brain by delivering a therapeutic dose of X-ray radiation to the injury site using microplanar X-ray beams. Generally, a therapeutic dose is an amount of radiation necessary to at least damage and preferably ablate particular types of cells or tissue in a targeted volume. The method preferably inhibits or minimizes the formation of an astrogliotic or gliosis barrier at the site of injury and simultaneously promotes the regeneration and reconnection of axons. The in-beam therapeutic dose at the injury site, delivered by the microbeams, preferably operates to promote a less hostile environment in which the presence of growth inhibiting molecules and leukocytes is minimized and the recovery of the glial system and remyelination processes are encouraged.

Referring to FIG. 1, the present invention provides a method of assisting functional recovery of a damaged spinal cord or brain by irradiating an entire area of spinal cord or brain damage, i.e., the injury site 10, with at least one array of microplanar beams 12 of X-ray radiation. The particular pattern of radiation formed by the microbeam irradiation at the injury site 10 preferably both inhibits the formation of a gliotic barrier formed by injury to the spinal cord or brain, and promotes the regeneration of the damaged microvasculature general system to produce substantial functional recovery. The method of the present invention preferably promotes this regeneration by encouraging a bridging of healthy tissue on opposite sides of the damaged area. This is accomplished preferably by reducing the concentration of reactive astrocytes and axon-growth inhibiting molecules such as condroitin-sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) and keratan-sulfate proteoglycans (KSPGs) and immune-response cells such as leukocytes, and promoting remyelination to produce substantial physiological, neurological, and functional recovery.

The use of microbeam arrays is known in the prior art for use in microbeam radiation therapy (MRT) as an experimental method for the treatment and ablation of tumors, as described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,339,347 to Slatkin et al., which is incorporated herein by reference. MRT differs from conventional radiation therapy by employing arrays of preferably parallel and planar microbeams of radiation (microplanar beams). The thickness of each microplanar beam is at least one order of magnitude smaller in thickness (or diameter if cylindrical rather than planar beams are used) than the smallest radiation beams in conventional clinical use. The entire width of the array, however, may still cover an area comparable to that covered using broad beam. The advantage over conventional broad beam radiation for tumor ablation and control is that the irradiated normal tissue in the path of the individual microbeams, which is often irreversibly damaged by conventional radiation therapy, is allowed to recover from any radiation injury by regeneration from the supportive cells surviving between the microbeams.

The Slatkin et al. patent discloses the segmentation of a broad beam of high energy X-ray into arrays of parallel microbeams (beams of thickness less than about 1 millimeter (mm)), and a method of using the microbeams to perform radiation therapy on tumors. The tumor receives a summed absorbed dose of radiation exceeding a maximum absorbed dose tolerable by the target tissue by crossing or intersecting microbeams at the target tissue. The irradiated in-beam normal tissue is exposed only to non-crossing beams. Normal tissue between the microbeams receives a summed absorbed dose of radiation, called a valley dose, less than the maximum tolerable dose; i.e., normal tissue in the valleys receives a non-lethal dose, leaving surviving supporting cells. The surviving cells migrate to the irradiated normal tissue in the path of the microbeam, allowing normal tissue in the path of the beam to recover from radiation injury.

The method of the present invention includes irradiating the injury site of an acute (injury site less than 20 days old) or chronic (more than 20 days old) injury to the spinal cord or brain with an array of microbeams, which are preferably parallel microplanar beams, instead of using a conventional, unsegmented broad beam, to assist recovery from the injury. The use of microbeam arrays for recovery of damaged spinal cord and brain takes advantage of the normal tissue-sparing characteristics offered by the geometry of microbeam arrays, described supra. The microbeam arrays allow the normal tissue, including that of the central nervous system (CNS) which encompasses the spinal cord, to recover almost completely from the damage produced by the radiation.

In addition, it is believed that irradiation of the injury site with microbeam arrays advantageously assists in recovering the capillary blood vessels that are injured in a reversible manner. Segments of the endothelial cells in the direct path of the microbeams are destroyed (as would occur with conventional broad beams), but are regenerated by endothelial cells and vessel wall cells surviving between microbeams. Consequently, the massive vascular collapse and tissue collapse that occurs with conventional broad-beam treatment of spinal cord and brain injuries is avoided, and the tissue's microstructure, which is mainly the capillary blood vessels, is spared.

Specifically, in the prior art broad-beam methods for treating brain and spinal cord injury, the width of a conventional broad beam is too large to allow the above recovery process to proceed. Because the capillary blood vessels constitute the basic infrastructure of the tissue, its survival is the most important factor in the recovery of the entire CNS tissue from microbeam arrays.

The method of the present invention is also believed to advantageously promote the restoration of the “in-beam” glial cells and myelin in the healthy CNS tissue just outside the injury site, which are damaged by direct irradiation as the microbeams traverse a path to the injury site. For example, although the microbeams of the present invention can kill progenitor and mature glial cells and destroy myelin in the path of the individual beams, this system component also recovers, this time from the endogenous progenitor glial cells in the CNS tissue which survive between microbeams. These surviving cells migrate to the neighboring areas of direct exposure to microbeams in which the tissue has been depleted of glial cells. The cells then differentiate and become mature and functioning glial cells, including mature and myelinating oligodendrocytes. Finally, a remyelination process begins whereby lost myelin is replaced with a new, functioning myelin.

The microbeam array essentially “cleans” the gliosis produced at the injury site by reactive astrocytes, which forms the junction between healthy tissue, by using an adequately high dose, or “therapeutic dose” of X-ray radiation. The therapeutic dose as used herein is the in-beam, in-depth (at the depth of the injury) radiation dose, typically measured in units of Gray (“Gy”), required at the injury site to allow the damaged spinal cord or brain to recover from the injury. The therapeutic dose must, however, remain below the threshold for inducing permanent radiation damage to normal tissue in the beam path.

Preferably, the therapeutic dose of irradiation kills the glial cells in the path of the microbeams, mostly reactive astrocytes whose aggregation will (or has) produced the gliotic barrier, without damaging the cord itself. It is believed that the net effect is that the microvasculature at the junction reestablishes itself and the bridging process at the junction proceeds, leading to the rejoining of axons, functional remyelination and, consequently, functional restoration within the damaged spinal cord or brain. Basically, the microbeams are used to clean an injured area temporarily of inhibitors of regeneration by ridding the zone of reactive astrocytes, leukocytes and axon-growth inhibiting molecules such as CSPGs and KSPGs. Previous methods of broad-beam irradiation required low tolerable doses of irradiation to prevent radiation damage to normal tissue. These low doses are not capable of substantially assisting recovery of the injury site by, for example, cleaning an area entirely of reactive astrocytes, leukocytes and CSPGs/KSPGs.

The therapeutic dose, therefore, is preferably the dose required to substantially cleanse, ablate or remove the selected cells, in this case, regeneration inhibitors, such as reactive astrocytes, CSPGs, and KSPGs, at least temporarily, from the irradiated in-beam portion of the injury site.

Referring again to FIG. 1, in the method of the present invention, an injury site 10 of a portion of a nervous system, for example, the spinal cord 14, of a patient is irradiated through surrounding bone and tissue 15 with at least one array of microbeams 12. The array 12 includes at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams 16. The number and spatial arrangement of the microbeams in the array 12 are so chosen to deliver a therapeutic dose of X-ray radiation to the injury site 10 through the microbeams 16.

As indicated in FIG. 1, the injury site 10 as used herein refers to a volume targeted for irradiation treatment, which encompasses the tissue affected by the acute or chronic injury in addition to a marginal volume around the affected or damaged tissue. The marginal volume is determined by factors known to those skilled in the art of conventional radiation treatment. Such factors include the accuracy of the radiation source used in hitting a designated volume, and considerations of possible spreading or misestimation of the extent of tissue affected by the acute or chronic injury.

As shown in FIG. 2, the microbeams 16 in an array 12 preferably include parallel irradiation planes (vertically oriented in the embodiment shown in FIGS. 1-4, but could also be horizontal or slanted) 18, and may also be referred to as microplanar beams 16. These microplanar beams 16 preferably have a substantially rectangular cross-section, with a beam thickness 20 corresponding to the short side of the rectangular cross-section. The array 12 is also characterized by a center-to-center beam spacing 22 and a width 24.

The term “beam spacing” as used herein refers to the center-to-center beam spacing 22, which is generally measured as the distance between the maximum intensity profile points of adjacent microbeams. In the case of a flat intensity dose profile in each microbeam, the center-to-center beam spacing 22 would be measured as the distance between the mid-points of the intensity profiles of adjacent microbeams.

In addition, the microbeams 16 generated in the array 12 are preferably substantially collimated at least in the plane perpendicular to the radiation plane, so that the spacing 22 is substantially maintained between the beams 16 as they traverse the subject. The microbeams 16 preferably also include substantially sharp, well-defined edges separating adjacent microbeams in the array 14, for sharp dose fall-off, thus minimizing the valley dose between the beams 16.

Preferably, the width 24 of the microbeams and a total length 26 of the array 12 are large enough to irradiate the entire volume enclosing the injury site 10, which includes some additional margin. A typical size of the microbeam array may be about 4 cm wide across a vertical spinal column, e.g., and 6 cm high along the vertical spinal column.

If the injury site 10, represented by a circle around a narrow horizontal line representing the location of a center of the injured tissue in FIG. 1, covers a height greater than that (width 24) of the microbeam array, however, then the therapeutic dose may be provided over the entire height of the injury site by translating the patient in the path of the at least two microbeams of the microbeam array (vertically, in FIG. 1). The method may include using a stepwise scanning method (step-and-shoot) in which the subject or source is translated in the beam at a certain step height after each irradiation step or in a continuously scanning method in which the subject or source is translated continuously. Similarly, if the extent 26 of the array 12 does not cover the injury site 10, arrays may be generated side-by-side using a stepwise scanning method.

Although the microplanar beam geometry described supra is preferred, any microbeam and microbeam array geometry capable of safely and effectively delivering the therapeutic dose necessary to ablate selected types of cells and, in this case, to assist recovery of the injury site are within the scope of the invention. For example, an array of cylindrical pencil beams may be used. In addition, the array may be a two-dimensional array, for example, a rectangular array of microbeams, the microbeams of the array being preferably substantially equally spaced. A rectangular or other two-dimensional array may be preferred when the cross-sections of the microbeams are circular, square, or otherwise substantially radially symmetrical.

Preferably, the microplanar beams 16 of the array 12 of the present invention are produced simultaneously using a multislit collimator having any of various designs known in the art. Such collimators have multiple radiation transmissive apertures that allow an array of spatially distinct microbeams to be simultaneously produced from a single wide radiation beam.

The multislit collimator generating the array 12 is preferably positioned in front of the X-ray source, but very close to the subject's body, in order to minimize the so-called “penumbra” or shadow of the source beam. Placing the collimator close to the beam, therefore, helps maintain the desirable sharp edges of the beams 16 throughout the subject.

The single X-ray radiation beam impinging on the multislit collimator may be generated by any source of X-rays capable of producing the required therapeutic dose. For example, the appropriate X-ray radiation may be generated by filtering radiation produced by a high energy synchrotron or an X-ray tube (bremsstrahlung radiation). The fluence rate of the source used to implement the method of the present invention is preferably high, so that exposure times are sufficiently short, reducing the possibility of smearing the microbeam dose pattern produced at the injury site.

One possible source of X-rays is a wiggler insertion device in a so-called “beamline” of a high-energy electron storage ring of an X-ray synchrotron. An exemplary beam source is the superconducting wiggler insertion device of the X17B beamline of the National Synchrotron Light Source at Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, N.Y. A conventional “planar” wiggler uses periodic transverse magnetic fields to produce a beam of rectangular cross-section, typically having a horizontal to vertical beam opening angle ratio on the order of 50:1. In an alternative embodiment, the radiation beam is obtained from a “helical” wiggler, a configuration capable of producing a substantially less anisotropic beam.

In a preferred embodiment for treating spinal cord or brain injury, the source will be a bremsstrahlung X-ray generator. The bremsstrahlung X-ray source may include a high-throughput rotating anode X-ray tube operating at a very high voltage (preferably about 150 kV-peak or higher) and a very high current (100 mA or higher).

Whether the source is a bremsstrahlung source or storage ring, the beam is preferably filtered with copper or heavier elements to eliminate the low end of the energy spectrum, thus producing a higher mean spectral energy. Preferably, the half-power energy of the filtered X-ray beam is in the range of 100-250 keV. For example, to produce the desired energy spectrum from a high-throughput rotating anode tube operating at 140-250 kVp, the beam should be heavily filtered, e.g., through about 1-10 mm thick copper.

Most preferably, the X-ray source is one or more X-ray tubes generating bremsstrahlung radiation. One X-ray tube may be used and either the subject or the tube repositioned to produce the microbeam arrays of the present invention. Alternatively, multiple X-ray tubes may be maintained in fixed positions arranged around the patient, at the appropriate angles of incidence to the patient, to generate the arrays in accordance with the methods of the present invention.

The focal spot size of the X-ray tube(s) should be minimized to reduce the beam penumbra, assuring sharp edges and thus a sharp dose fall-off to minimize the valley dose. Optimally, X-ray tubes for use with the method of the present invention include a) a source spot size smaller or comparable to the thickness of the microplanar beams, b) a stable stand to keep the tube fixed at different angles with little vibrations, and c) a geometry that allows placement of the tube close to the subject (preferably within 50 centimeters), in order to maximize the dose rate.

Referring again to FIG. 2, the optimal beam thickness 20 and spacing 22 will vary depending on the characteristics of the source. The ratio of beam thickness 20 to center-to-center beam spacing 22, however, will preferably be in a range of from about 1 to 4 to about 1 to 16, regardless of whether the source is a high-energy electron storage ring or a bremsstrahlung X-ray tube.

In one embodiment, the ratio of thickness 20 to center-to-center beam spacing 22 is in a range from about 1 to 6 to about 1 to 8.

In another embodiment, the ratio of beam thickness 20 to center-to-center beam spacing 22 will be substantially equal to 1 to 7.

If a synchrotron source is used to generate the microbeams and implement the method of the present invention, for example, one preferable choice of beam thickness 20 and spacing 22 are 30 micrometers (μm) and 210 μm, respectively (1:7). If a bremsstrahlung X-ray tube is used, a more preferable choice is a beam thickness 20 of about 0.7 mm (or within a range of about 0.5 mm to 0.9 mm) and beam spacing of about 4.9 mm (or within a range of about 3.5 mm to 6.3 mm). Though a larger beam size is preferred when using an X-ray tube, the same ratio of thickness 20 to spacing 22 of 1 to 7 as the synchrotron-beam example is preferred.

The preferred thickness of the microbeams for implementing the method of the present invention using a bremsstrahlung source is larger, because the effective source spot size in bremsstrahlung sources is larger than that of a storage ring. The effective source spot size is defined as the angle at which the source spot size is viewed from the position of the target or, equivalently, the ratio of the source size to the distance between the source and the target. Although the actual spot sizes in the synchrotron and the bremsstrahlung sources might be comparable to each other, the source-to-target distance is much larger for the synchrotron source (about 10 m) than for the bremsstrahlung source (about 1 m).

In a preferred embodiment, therefore, the method includes providing the microbeam array of X-ray radiation using a bremsstrahlung radiation source, e.g., X-ray tubes, where the thickness of the microbeams is substantially in a range of about 0.1 mm to 1.0 mm. In addition, the ratio of beam thickness 20 to center-to-center beam spacing 22 is preferably substantially equal to 1 to 7.

In another embodiment, the beam thickness 20 is substantially equal to or greater than about 0.02 mm (20 μm) and less than or equal to about 1.0 mm.

In still another embodiment, preferably using synchrotron X-ray radiation, the beam thickness is substantially equal to or greater than about 20 μm and less than or equal to about 100 μm.

In yet another embodiment, microbeams are provided which include a width substantially less than or equal to about one millimeter.

The therapeutic dose of the present invention to allow substantial recovery of the brain or spinal cord from the injury is preferably within a range of about 30 to about 500 Gy in-beam in-depth dose, where the in-beam in-depth dose refers to the dose inside each microplanar beam at the depth, within the body, of the spinal cord or brain.

It is well known to those skilled in the art that the threshold dose, or maximum tolerable dose before neurological and other complications of radiotherapy arise, increases as irradiated volumes of tissue are made smaller. Equivalently, as the irradiated volume (beam thickness) increases, the maximum tolerable dose decreases. The beam thickness, therefore, partially sets the upper limit of the therapeutic dose that can be safely administered.

In the preferred embodiment of the present method, a bremsstrahlung source is used to deliver the therapeutic dose. As discussed supra, the thickness of the microbeams produced will then preferably be in a range of about 0.5 mm to about 0.7 mm with a ratio thickness to beam spacing of about 1:7. The therapeutic dose for this case is then limited to a smaller upper limit. In one embodiment, the in-beam, in-depth dose is preferably within a range of about 30 to about 200 Gy.

The required rate at which the dose is delivered, i.e., the dose rate, depends on the dose to be administered. If the in-beam dose required is about 100 Gy, then the dose rate should be at least about 2 Gy per minute to allow administration of the 100 Gy dose in about 50 minutes. Both types of sources are capable of this dose rate. In general, however, a synchrotron source can provide a much higher dose rate than X-ray tubes.

The injury site may be irradiated, according to the present invention, within 20 days or less after the injury occurred, i.e., while the injury is still classified as an acute injury

The injury site may also be irradiated 20 days after the injury to assist recovery of a chronic injury.

In addition, the therapeutic dose may be delivered either in a single session (single dose fraction) or in several sessions in so-called “dose fractions” or “dose fractionations” separated by a time interval. As referred to herein, however, the dose fractions are defined in the same way as the therapeutic dose: each dose fraction includes the in-beam in-depth therapeutic dose required at the injury site to allow the damaged spinal cord or brain to substantially recover from the injury.

In other words, the transient damage to the irradiated portion of the injury site is sufficient, in every session, to allow that portion to be at least temporarily cleaned of regeneration inhibitors, so that neighboring progenitor glial cells can migrate to the injured portion and begin a process of repair.

The in-beam tissue dose (i.e., in-depth dose) in all fractions must be high enough to ablate the target cells, such as progenitor glial cells or reactive astrocytes; i.e., the same as the in-beam in-depth therapeutic dose. Therefore, no matter how many dose fractions are used, each dose fraction must be above the cell-ablation threshold, and is not accumulative. In this sense, the term “dose fraction” is simply the in-beam in-depth therapeutic dose required, and not a fraction thereof. However, the “valley” dose, which is accumulative, must be kept as low as possible (through the optimal choice of the beam width, beam spacing, and the in-beam dose). Here the limitation is that the accumulative valley dose for the entire treatment period will not surpass the limit of tissue tolerance for dose-fractionated broad beams in the same fractionation schedule.

In a preferred embodiment, several dose fractions, i.e., therapeutic doses, are administered to the subject by irradiating the injury site in subsequent sessions from different angles with so-called “angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays (“AVIMA”).

By applying dose fractionation with AVIMA, normal tissue in the path of the beam is irradiated only once, thus minimizing possible radiation damage to normal tissue. In addition, regions of the injury site receiving multiple in-beam in-depth therapeutic doses, receive a higher summed dose to more effectively clean the gliotic tissue. Another advantage of the AVIMA geometry, as described below, is that a greater area of the injury site is irradiated.

Referring again to FIG. 3, in an embodiment of a method of the present invention, therefore, a therapeutic dose is administered in more than one session using angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays. The microbeam arrays intersect substantially only at the injury site 10, as indicated by the grid-like regions of intersection 28 in FIG. 3 within the area of the injury site 10. The method using AVIMA preferably includes irradiating the injury site 10 with arrays of angle-variable microbeams centered around and including a “zero angle” array 30. Preferably, the zero angle array 30 is directed to squarely impinge on the subject's back, i.e., the array 30 is normally incident (90 degree angle of incidence) on the back. Adjacent angle-variable intersecting arrays (34, 30) are separated by an angular displacement 32. A first therapeutic dose is delivered in one of the angle-variable microbeam arrays 30 at “Time Zero” on Day 1 of treatment during a first session.

The method further includes angularly displacing by a non-zero integer multiple of the displacement angle 32 either the X-ray source or the subject about an axis of rotation 35 through a center of the injury site 10 (See FIG. 1) and, after a time interval between sessions, additionally irradiating the injury site 10 with one of the angularly displaced, i.e., angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays 34. The axis of rotation 35 is preferably substantially parallel to the irradiation planes 18 of the microbeams 16 (see FIGS. 1-2). The method includes repeatedly angularly displacing and additionally irradiating after the time interval, until the injury site 10 has been irradiated a total number n of times over n sessions separated by the time interval, by a total number n of AVIMAs.

In another embodiment, the number of irradiations may also be doubled by reirradiating a second time at each angular position of each angle-variable array using a second irradiation geometry. The second irradiation geometry is provided by either reorienting the multislit collimator provided between the source and the subject, or by changing to a different collimator. The two different positions may include different slanted orientations (not horizontal or vertical), horizontal, or vertical orientation. The method described supra of administering angle-variable intersecting arrays, wherein each array comprises a therapeutic dose of radiation would then be repeated. When the irradiation geometry is described by vertically-oriented microbeams, the subject or source is rotated by some multiple of the angular displacement angle 32 from one fraction to the next (for different AVIMAs) about a vertical axis centered through the injury site. When the irradiation geometry is described by horizontally-oriented microbeams, the subject or source is rotated about a horizontal axis. When slanted microbeams are used, the angle of rotation or displacement is parallel to the slanted axis. Though a temporal sequence of sessions may alternate randomly in both irradiation geometry (orientation of the irradiation planes) and angular displacement, it is probably more practical to first irradiate the injury site at all angles of the AVIMAs using one irradiation geometry before turning/changing the collimator (or subject) to a second irradiation geometry.

In one embodiment, every angle-variable intersecting microbeam array irradiating the injury site can have a different irradiation orientation.

The following further describes the most likely geometries of the irradiations, although not the only ones, given the practicality of implementing the present method with existing X-ray sources. The microbeam arrays may be propagated horizontally from a source, which would be the case for most synchrotron beams and some X-ray tubes. Optionally, the arrays may be propagated vertically from a source pointing up from the floor or down from the ceiling (most X-ray tubes beam).

Horizontal beams will preferably be administered with the patient either sitting upright on a patient positioning chair or lying down on his/her side on a patient positioning bed. Vertical beams will preferably be used with the patient lying down on the bed other on his/her back (with the beam coming up from the floor), or lying down on the bad on his/her front (with the beam coming down from the ceiling). For both the horizontally and vertically propagating beams, the patient's back is toward the beam and the angle of incidence of the microbeams in the array is 90 degrees for the “zero angle” of irradiation. The additional arrays are preferably centered around the zero angle array. In the discussion that follows the “Time Zero” or first dose fraction is at the zero angle. Subsequent irradiation angles may vary widely for different dose-fraction administration. The parallel irradiation planes of the individual microbeams in an array are preferably aligned either vertically or horizontally, at least in the geometry of “zero angle.” However, the alignment angle may be titled for other irradiation geometries as discussed above, by repositioning the subject or the collimator in front of the X-ray source generating the arrays. In other words, the irradiation geometry may be different for every dose fraction administration for every angle-variable intersecting microbeam array.

Referring to FIGS. 1-4, the following example describes the angle-changing geometry. In this example, the beam array 12 propagates horizontally, the X-ray source irradiating the injury site 10 from the side. The microplanar beams 16 in the array are vertical, and the patient sits upright (spinal cord 14 vertical) with the back to the beam for the zero angle geometry (first fraction). The incident angle of the beam 12 on the subject between the dose fractions will then change laterally, as shown in FIG. 3. In other words, either the source or the subject rotates around a vertical axis that goes through the center of the injury site 10 in the patient's spinal cord 14 between dose fractions.

AVIMA with dose fractionation may be implemented similarly in any combination/orientation of the beam and patient geometries. For example, in the above example (horizontally propagating beam; upright or on-the-side patient) one can also use horizontally oriented microplanar beams instead of vertically oriented ones (in the zero angle geometry), and rotate the source or the patient about a horizontal axis that goes through the injury site (although the beam can be rotated only when produced by an X-ray tube).

Not all combinations of the motions, however, are possible. For example, for vertically propagating beams (patient lying on his/her back or front) there will be two possible orientations of the parallel irradiation planes 18 of the microplanar beams 16: either parallel to the spinal cord or perpendicular to it. If parallel, then the source or patient should be rotated about the spinal cord between dose fractions, while, if perpendicular, the rotation should be about a horizontal axis perpendicular to the spinal cord. In both these cases it will not be easy to rotate the patient because his/her general positioning may change, thus the rotation is preferably implemented by rotating the source.

Several dose fractions (sessions), may be administered using AVIMA, preferably ranging from a total of about 3-30, using one or more of the irradiation geometries of the microplanar beams described above. For example, in the example using a horizontally propagating beam and patient sitting upright or lying on his/her side (side-reclined position), the therapeutic dose can be given at each angle corresponding to the AVIMAs once with horizontally oriented microplanar beams and once with vertically oriented ones. Each session is separated by a minimum time interval.

In one embodiment, the minimal time between sessions in which each dose fraction is administered is at least about six (6) hours.

In another embodiment, the time between sessions preferably ranges from about twelve (12) hours to about thirty-six (36) hours.

In yet another embodiment, the time between sessions preferably ranges from about twelve (12) hours to about seven (7) days.

Retreatment of chronic spinal cord injury is also within the scope of the method of the present invention. The entire treatment is preferably repeated, if needed, within about six (6) to eighteen (18) months after a previous treatment.

A further illustration of the AVIMA method of the present invention includes the preferred geometry of the microbeam arrays of the present invention, for which the beam thickness is about 1/7 of the center-to-center beam spacing. In each dose fraction, therefore, about 14.3% of the target's volume is irradiated. If the dose is adequately high to kill all progenitor glial cells residing in the direct beam path, 14.3% of the entire population of such cells are ablated in the first dose faction administration. The additional percentage of progenitor cells in subsequent fractions, preferably administered at wide angles to the direction of the first or “zero angle” beam, is slightly smaller than this number, due to the geometry. The microbeams of the angularly displaced arrays will intersect a subregion of the zero angle-irradiated regions of the injury site. In other words, smaller areas of the array from one dose fraction will cross those from an earlier fraction. In general, if the letter “r” denotes the ratio of beam width divided by beam spacing, and letter “n” denotes the number of dose fractions, the surviving fraction “s” of the directly-hit progenitor glial cells after n dose fractions is defined by equation (1) to be: s=1−(1−r)^(n)  (1)

Therefore, for r=0.143 (1:7 thickness to spacing ratio) and n=5 dose fractions (sessions), one finds s=0.54, i.e., about 54% of the cells will be hit directly at least once. If each directly-hit progenitor leads to a rejuvenated, mature glial cell, then about 54% of the glial system will be rejuvenated in this example.

If two sets of irradiations are carried out using two different irradiation geometries, at each of n angular positions of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays, then 2n dose fractions are administered over 2n sessions, and s=1−(1−r)^(2n).

Referring to FIG. 4, in dose-fraction with AVIMA, the administration angles for different dose fractions are chosen to provide the widest possible angular spread θ 36 among the fractions. The angular spread 36 encompasses all of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays. The maximum spread 36 is limited to the angular access afforded by the location of the injury, patient-positioning ability of the equipment and the irradiation source. Because the irradiation is administered to the back, less than 180° of angular spread will be available. A reasonable variation is probably about 140° angular spread θ36 for each possible angle variation geometry, i.e., from zero angle in which the patient's back is precisely facing to beam, to ±70°.

In one embodiment, the angular spread 36 is substantially in a range between about 130 degrees to about 150 degrees.

In general, the formula to choose the angular spacing between the beams for n dose fractions or sessions is preferably equal to θ/(n−1). For example, for n=3 (three fractions only), and θ=140°, the angular displacement will be 70° between irradiations, and the angles will be −70°, 0°, and +70°, where 0° represents the angle at which the beams hit the patient's back. Similarly, for n=5, the microbeam array is angularly displaced by about 35° between irradiations; thus the angles will be −70°, −35°, 0°, +35°, and +70°. As indicated supra, these dose fractions can also be divided into two groups per session, using different irradiation geometries or orientations of the microplanar beams, thus increasing further the angular range between fractions.

The choice of the orientation of the microplanar beams with respect to the spinal cord may have physiological/neurological consequences for two reasons. First, the spinal cord is essentially made of long axons either coming from the brain or returning to the brain. Second, the breathing cycle of the patient may cause the spinal cord to move up and down or sideways, a motion which may smear the dose distribution of the microbeam array.

In general, it may be safer to have the microplanar beams not parallel to the cord because they may engulf long segments of axons. This consideration might be more important when used wider microbeams (e.g., 0.7 mm wide). The breathing motion should also be taken into account, however, which is more important for microbeam arrays with small beam width and small beam spacing. For example, for a horizontally propagating beam with the patient sitting upright with his/her back to the beam, it might be advantageous to use horizontally oriented microplanar beams than vertical ones not to be parallel to the cord, although in this geometry an array with horizontal microplanar beams may be more vulnerable to beam smearing because the breathing motion may be more an up-and-down one.

Preferably, the method of the present invention includes maximizing removal of the substantial amount of regeneration inhibitors from the portion of the injury site by optimizing several factors, such as the therapeutic dose of a single fraction, and minimizing the valley dose to minimize damage to the adjacent tissue between the microbeams. The in-beam in-depth therapeutic dose to valley dose ratio may be also optimized by controlling at least one of the thickness of the microbeams, the spacing between microbeams, the ratio of the thickness to the spacing, and the energy spectrum of the microbeam array.

In order to optimize the in-beam therapeutic dose to valley dose or “peak-to-valley” ratio, the dose fall-off at the edge of any individual microbeam inside a microbeam array of the present invention is preferably sharp enough at beam energies of between about 50 keV and about 200 keV, and at tissue depths of from about 1 cm to about 40 cm, to result in large peak-to-valley dose ratios for the present invention. Such large ratios allow dose planning so that the peak dose will be lethal to the regeneration inhibitors such as reactive astrocytes and axon-growth inhibiting molecules of CSPGs and/or KSPGs, while valley doses will be low enough to allow most normal and regenerative cells, such as progenitor glial cells, to survive the radiation. These glial cells can then migrate to the cleansed irradiated portion of the injured site to assist in tissue repair.

The appropriate selection of the parameters of microbeam field configuration and peak dose is critical to the efficacy of microbeam radiation therapy for assisting recovery of damaged nervous system such as the brain and spine. The peak dose along the microbeam axis and the center-to-center spacings of the microbeams must be appropriately selected to ensure sufficiently low doses to tissue present in the valleys between the microbeams. The implemented combination of dose and configuration allows endothelial cells, oligodendrocytes (in brain tissue), and glial cells between the microbeams to divide and to repopulate the irradiated portion of the injured site, as well as the in-beam tissues damaged by the radiation treatment outside the injury site. Thus, unidirectional exposure does not permanently damage normal tissue.

In one embodiment, a therapeutic in-beam in-depth dose is delivered in fractionated doses in a range from about 30 Gy to about 500 Gy. The number of fractionated doses is preferably in a range of about 3 to 30 doses.

The success of the AVIMA methods of the present invention relies in part, therefore, on maintaining accurate microbeam placement from session to session, and during the exposure time of one session. Therefore, the methods of the present invention are preferably implemented using stereotactic apparatus to preferably eliminate or at least substantially minimize so-called macromotion, for example, from random movements of the patient.

Other sources of motion, referred to as tissue “micromotion” as discussed supra are induced by physiomechanical cycles, namely, cardiac pulsations and pulmonary or respiratory cycles. The methods of the present invention may, therefore, be performed in a pulsed mode, the pulsations of the microbeams being synchronized with the subsequent rhythmic displacements of the injury site. Most preferably, the pulses are synchronized with an electrocardiogram, as described, for example, in the Slatkin, et al. patent.

In one embodiment of the present invention, the high energy electromagnetic radiation source is pulsed, so that the microbeam array is delivered in a plurality of temporally discrete pulses. Preferably, the temporally discrete pulses are substantially synchronized with a physiomechanical cycle of the patient. Most preferably, the physiomechanical cycle includes at least one of a cardiac cycle and a cardiopulmonary cycle.

In another embodiment of the present invention, a method of the present invention includes combining the microbeam irradiation of the injury site using any of the beam geometries and characteristics discussed herein with transplantation of embryonic stem (ES) cells to the injury site. It is believed that the combination of these two methods will greatly enhance the recovery of an injury to a portion of a nervous system, particularly, to the brain or spinal cord.

It is very much likely that the population of endogenous glial stem cells naturally existing in the spinal cord (also called progenitor glial cells), once stimulated by microbeam irradiations to proliferate and differentiate, will be adequate to complete the process of the “glial system rejuvenation” which may be necessary to allow axonal growth and reconnection, as well as remyelination toward the recovery from spinal cord injury. However, it is also possible that external administration of stem cell will assist the recovery process by accelerating it or by making it more efficient. The administered stem cells might be human or animal embryonic cells. The stem cell administration may or may not require a surgical process.

The methods of the present invention may be used to treat both acute cases of spinal cord or brain injuries, existing for up to 20 days after injury, and chronic cases of spinal cord injuries, which are older than 20 days.

The present methods of irradiating a target volume with the microbeam arrays of the present invention may also be applied to treat various diseases. The ability to selectively damage sub-millimetric or millimetric volumes of tissue using microplanar beam arrays is especially well-suited to treat restricted volumes of the central nervous system (CNS) without affecting nearby structures which, if damaged, can cause severe neurological complications. Therefore, the methods of the present invention described above for delivering a therapeutic dose to an injury site to ablate selected glial cells using a single microplanar array or intersecting microbeam arrays, including the AVIMA method of the present invention (See FIGS. 3 and 4 and related discussion), may also be effectively applied to deliver a therapeutic or a palliative dose to ablate at least a portion of selected tissues and/or cells in a target volume to treat diseases or conditions of the central nervous system, as well as diseases affecting other organs. For example, in response to irradiating and ablating mitotic cells with microplanar beam arrays in accordance with the methods of the present invention, the surviving cells on both sides of each microplanar beam are stimulated to divide, differentiate, and replace the dead cell, which could be a diseased one.

It should be noted that the phrase therapeutic dose is often used to refer to an amount of radiation needed to cure a disease or to substantially eliminate a tumor or the source of a condition such as epilepsy. As used herein, however, the therapeutic dose is that amount of radiation required to at eliminate or ablate at least a portion of the selected diseased cells, for example, within the target volume. Accordingly, the therapeutic dose as defined herein may correspond to an amount of radiation required to cure a disease by eliminating enough of the diseased cells to effect a cure, or to that amount of radiation required to have a palliative effect. As known to those skilled in the art, a dose of radiation less than that required to achieve a cure or eliminate a condition may still advantageously result in a palliative effect, i.e., in the temporary or long-term improvement of a patient's condition and, therefore, in the quality of the patient's life. A palliative dose is often administered in cases where a full curative dose, or curative treatment in general, is not possible, due to factors such as the limited tolerance of radiation-sensitive tissue surrounding the affected targeted tissue volume.

Therefore, additional embodiments of the methods of the present invention include treating various diseases and conditions using either a microplanar beam array and preferably, AVIMA, with the proper irradiation parameters (beam width, beam spacing, array size, dose, dose-fractionation schedule, irradiation angle for different dose factions, and so on) to irradiate the selected cells, i.e., selected types of cells, with a therapeutic dose for a palliative or curative effect as described in more detail below.

Referring to FIG. 5, according to a method of the present invention, an array 40 of microplanar beams 42 is applied to selectively irradiate and preferably ablate certain cell types in a target volume 44 for therapeutic purposes, with either curative or palliative effect. As also shown in FIG. 2 and discussed above, the microplanar beams 42 in the array 40 are substantially parallel. The selected cells may be of any specified type, depending on the disease or condition being treated, and thus may be either mitotic or non-mitotic.

Referring to FIG. 6, according to another method of the present invention, AVIMA as described above with reference to FIGS. 3 and 4 is used to irradiate and preferably ablate selected cells in the target volume 44 at the intersection 46 of a first or “zero-angle” microbeam array 48 and a second displaced array 50 separated by an angular displacement 52. Subsequent exposures with the microbeam array are preferably administered by rotating the subject and/or microbeam array in the xy plane 54 of the paper, i.e., around the z-axis. In the irradiations, the microplanar beams in each array are preferably parallel to the axis (in FIG. 6, the z-axis) around which the targeting angle changes.

In accordance with the methods of the present invention, in ablating either mitotic or non-mitotic cells, the dose in each fraction is preferably adjusted so that a) the in-beam dose is adequately high to substantially ablate at least a portion of the selected cells in the target volume, while b) the “valley” dose is not too high to damage the tissue. The dose will be adjusted according to whether a curative or palliative effect is the goal. The irradiation geometry, including beam width, array size, spacing, dose, dose-fractionation schedule, and irradiation angle, should be chosen so that the microplanar beams from different targeting angles are not parallel to those from previous irradiations. In addition, the microplanar beams from different irradiations are preferably spaced at angular intervals 52 with respect to each other of at least 20 degrees. Other considerations for beam width, spacing, array size and dose should account for the type of tissue or cell being irradiated, the target size and location, and the sensitivity of the surrounding tissue.

In particular, the dose chosen for irradiating the target tissue is preferably above the threshold to kill the selected cells throughout the entire depth of the target volume. As will be recognized by one skilled in the art, this dose is expected to be higher for non-mitotic cells than for mitotic ones. For example, the dose to directly kill neurons is about 300 Gy, while that to kill endothelial cells is about 30 Gy. These threshold doses can be found by animal studies according to methods known to those skilled in the art. In addition, as described above in the context of ablating progenitor glial cells to treat spinal cord injury, the total percentage of the targeted cells in the target volume that will be ablated and replaced with new cells can be approximated by multiplying the percentage of the cells ablated in each dose fraction by the number of dose fractions, after correcting for the target volume in which more than one microplanar beams cross (see equation (1) and discussion regarding FIG. 4).

Referring to FIGS. 5 and 6, a method of the present invention includes irradiation and preferably ablation of selected cells in an organ which inhibit the proliferation of healthy cells using at least one array 40 of microplanar beams 42 to treat various diseases for either a palliative or curative effect. By irradiation of the selected cells, tissue regeneration and tissue rejuvenation occurs through stimulation of particular mitotic cell types to proliferate, differentiate, and replace the diseased cell.

For example, in the disease known as multiple sclerosis (MS), the autoimmune system attacks myelin in the CNS in a periodic way, producing MS lesions or plaques in which the myelin and the mature oligodendrocytes are damaged and have become either fully or partially non-functional. The attacks also produce lesions of astrogliosis where the reactive astrocytes (i.e., astrocytes reacting in response to the injury—also called “angry astrocytes”) accumulate to produce aggregates of non-functioning cells. Generation of demyelination and gliosis can gradually lead to loss of axons and thus permanent damage to the CNS.

Therefore, a method of treating multiple sclerosis according to the present invention includes applying dose-fractionated irradiation of selected cells 46 including the lesions in a target volume 44 with angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays (AVIMA) 48 and 50 as shown in FIG. 6 and as described above in reference to FIGS. 3 and 4. In one embodiment, for example, daily irradiations of the lesions or of any selected mitotic cells for treating a particular disease according to the present invention, at angular intervals 52 of 30-degrees over a period of at least six (6) days are performed in order to stimulate the progenitor glial system. Alternatively, a larger number of dose fractions with smaller angular steps or a smaller number of dose fractions with larger angular steps may be performed for the same effect. One skilled in the art will appreciate that the optimum distribution will depend on such parameters as the type of tissue, the size of the target, the tissue depth, the microbeam thickness and spacing, and the radiation beam energy spectrum.

The method may force the neighboring progenitor cells surviving between the beams to divide, differentiate, and replace the diseased oligodendrocytes. The irradiations also preferably “clean” the gliotic scars by killing bands of astrocytes at the same time.

In another embodiment, the method of treating multiple sclerosis includes applying between 4-12 fractions every day or every other day.

In yet another embodiment, dose-fractionations are administered at adjacent angular intervals 52 of at least 20 degrees.

Another method according to the present invention includes irradiation of the target volume and preferably ablation of selected mitotic cells to treat demyelinating diseases such as Devic syndrome, Balo disease, Marchiafava-Bignami disease, central pontine myelinolysis, and adrenoleukodystrophy. In addition, a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method referred to as Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) has recently been applied to reveal a strong correlation between schizophrenia and some areas of demyelination in the brain. All of these disorders may be treated, therefore, according to the same methods described above for treating MS, by targeting selected progenitor and/or mature glial cells in the brain and spinal cord for irradiation and preferably ablation, preferably using dose-fractionation with AVIMA as described above.

Yet another method according to the present invention includes irradiation of the target volume and preferably ablation of selected mitotic cells to treat macular degeneration. This disease typically affects the elderly. The central area of vision is gradually lost because of gradual loss of cells called retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). The RPEs, which naturally phagocyte the ends of the “rods” in a periodic way, eventually accumulate in them a large amount of toxic material which does not undergo metabolic process, and which eventually kills the RPEs.

Preferably, irradiation and ablation of parallel rows of RPEs using dose-fractionation with AVIMA in a very early stage of the disease is applied according to the method of the present invention to treat macular degeneration. The irradiation with microbeams will preferably force the neighbors to divide to replace the dead cells. Each cell division may, therefore, reduce the amount of toxic substances in these cells to half, thus preferably prolonging its lifetime.

In one embodiment, daily irradiations of the RPEs at angular intervals 52 of 30-degrees over a period of at least six (6) days are performed in order to stimulate the progenitor glial system.

In another embodiment, the method of treating macular degeneration includes applying between 4-12 fractions every day or every other day to irradiate and substantially ablate parallel rows of RPEs.

In yet another embodiment, dose-fractionations used to treat macular degeneration are administered at adjacent angular intervals 52 of at least 20 degrees.

Still another method according to the present invention includes irradiation and preferably ablation of selected mitotic cells to treat fibroses of the liver, kidney, and lungs using the methods of irradiation with microbeam array(s) and/or AVIMA as described above. In these types of diseases, killing bands of different cell-types in these organs by microbeams will preferably force their surviving neighbors to divide and thus replace the diseased cell, leading gradually to tissue rejuvenations and recovery from fibrosis.

An additional method according to the present invention includes irradiation and preferably ablation of selected mitotic cells to stimulate new revascularization in diseased bone. The treatment of osteochondral lesions of the talus typically includes debridement of the chondral part followed by an attempt to stimulate revascularization of the necrotic bony part of the lesion. The latter is conventionally achieved mostly through multiple drilling of the subchondral zone. By applying the methods of microplanar beam irradiation described herein, a substantial amount of endothelial cells and vessel wall cells are preferably stimulated to regenerate to the extent that revascularization occurs. Using microplanar irradiation and preferably AVIMA as described herein to stimulate revascularization is advantageously less invasive than the conventionally applied surgical techniques.

The microbeam irradiation methods of the present invention can be used to selectively ablate certain types of progenitor or mature cells, including non-mitotic cells, without damaging the tissue's microvasculature, i.e., without damaging the tissue's infrastructure. Therefore, the techniques described herein may also be effectively applied to the irradiation of non-mitotic cells to achieve advantageous tissue effects for other therapeutic purposes. For example, using these methods, electrical conductivity in the atrial wall of the heart of a patient with atrial fibrillation could be reduced. Other applications include selectively damaging and preferably abating or killing individual cell types or tissues within the brain or the spinal cord to treat conditions such as epilepsy, pain, movement disorders, and neurological diseases.

In particular, in the case of atrial fibrillation, the therapeutic goal is to ablate and thus permanently eliminate myocardial cells in the atrial walls in relatively wide bands (e.g., 1 mm or wider) to diminish their conductivity to cardiac electrical waves. The process must be accomplished, however, without damaging or making necrotic the microvasculature of the atrial wall. According to a method of the present invention, the patient is preferably rotated during each irradiation session around an axis produced by the intersection of the microplanar beam with the atrial wall. Though this method is similar to the AVIMA method in that the target is irradiated at different angles, the technique here includes irradiating the target continuously as the angle is changed, rather than at discrete angles and at different times as is the case in the AVIMA method. In addition, because continuous rotation is required, it is preferably the subject that is rotated. The continuous rotation dilutes the dose to the tissues proximal and distal to the atrial wall to minimize radiation-induced damage to the surrounding tissues and subsequently allow the microvasculature of the atrial wall to recover.

Another application of the methods of the present invention to the irradiation and preferably ablation of targeted non-mitotic cells using intersecting microbeam arrays (AVIMA) is the treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD). In this case, the therapeutic goal is to ablate the sensorimotor region of the subthalamic nucleus (STN). It is well known that the cardinal symptoms of PD (akinesia, tremor, rigidity) are caused by hyperactivity of the dorsolateral region of the STN, where the sensorimotor neurons are located. The surgical ablation of the STN sensorimotor region is very hard due to its very small size (anteroposterior length of about 5 mm; lateral width of about 4 mm; depth of about 5 mm), but it has been shown that such an ablation can resolve all the symptoms of PD. However, it is essential not to harm the nearby limbic and cognitive regions of the STN as well as the internal capsule (IC) surrounding it. Radiosurgical ablation can be risky because it requires very high doses (120-150 Gy). The risks of causing damage to the nearby structures and of producing excessive brain edema are very high.

In contrast, irradiation using intersecting microplanar beam arrays according to the present invention, which are easily sized by varying the number of beams in the array, allows a new type of radiosurgery with very little risk. This so-called “microbeam radiosurgery,” or radiosurgery using microplanar beams, can precisely target the sensorimotor regions of the STN and deliver to them very high doses without damaging the surrounding parts of the STN or the IC. This is because the microbeam arrays are characterized by a very sharp dose fall-off, of the order of micrometers, which is advantageously applied to selectively ablate specific regions within the CNS. This sharp dose fall-off is unobtainable by conventional means.

Yet another application of the methods of the present invention to the irradiation and preferably ablation of non-mitotic cells in the target volume using intersecting microbeam arrays (AVIMA) is to the treatment of epilepsy. The therapeutic goal in this case is the destruction or ablation of cells within the center of a cortical dysplasia or similar epileptic focus. Preferably, the method of applying AVIMA to the treatment of epilepsy also includes following the irradiation with a focal injection of gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) producing cells to reduce the chance of recurrent seizures. GABA is an inhibitory neurotransmitter which is known to prevent seizures.

In addition, neurons or axons critical for seizure propagation may be targeted for irradiation and preferably ablation. Such cells can be located in the following areas and/or their white matter tracts: thalamus, cingulate gyrus, hippocampus, fimbria, amygdala, mammillary nucleus, and so on. In one embodiment, the method of irradiating neurons and axons critical for seizure propagation using AVIMA includes selecting the areas including the neurons and axons for irradiation by mapping the seizure propagation utilizing methods known to those skilled in the art, such as electroencephalography, magnetoencephalography, or imaging techniques using intracranial electrodes.

The microbeam array irradiation methods of the present invention may also be applied to the highly selective ablation of the dorsal root ganglion as it enters the spine for pain control. In particular, precise lesioning of the trigeminal nerve as it leaves the brainstem to enter in the Meckel's cave may be achieved by irradiating the nerve with intersecting microbeam arrays. Other types of cells that are preferably targeted for ablation to minimize pain include those in the medial thalamus or the cingulus structures involved in the perception of pain intensity.

Single or intersecting microbeam arrays may also be applied according to the methods of the present invention to treat various psychiatric disorders. For example, selective ablation of the anterior limb of the internal capsule may be used to treat obsessive-compulsive disorders (OCD), rather than the conventional intrusive capsulotomy methods. Selective ablation of the sub-genual cingulated cortex using the methods of the present invention may be used to treat depression in place of the cingulotomy methods known in the art.

Any of the methods of treatment described above may further include concomitant or subsequent administration of external stem cells, immune cells, or other cells to the targeted cells and surrounding tissue to accelerate the rejuvenation process and/or to assist the organ or CNS, for example, in gaining back its lost function. Preferably, the application of dose fractionations using AVIMA gradually rejuvenates more than 50% of the targeted cells by their replacement with cells originating from either endogenous or administered stem cells.

Although illustrative embodiments of the present invention have been described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to those precise embodiments, and that various other changes and modifications may be effected therein by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. 

1. A method of delivering a therapeutic dose for a palliative or curative effect to selected cell types in a target volume for treating a subject for a particular disease or condition, the method comprising: Irradiating selected cells in a target volume with at least one array of microbeams comprising at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams in an amount and spatially arranged to deliver a therapeutic dose of X-ray radiation to the selected cells in a target volume defined by the spatially arranged microbeams, wherein said irradiating ablates at least a portion of the selected cells for a palliative or curative effect on a subject suffering from a particular disease or condition associated with the selected cells without inducing necrosis in surrounding healthy tissue.
 2. The method of claim 1, said irradiating further comprising delivering the therapeutic dose with the at least one array of microbeams to the target volume repeatedly in a number n of sessions, adjacent sessions being separated by a time interval.
 3. The method of claim 2, wherein the at least one array comprises a number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays, and the method further comprises generating the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein said generating comprises: Irradiating the target volume with one of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays in a first session; angularly displacing at least one of an X-ray radiation source generating the at least one array and the subject about an axis of rotation through the target volume, wherein the axis of rotation is parallel to the at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams, to produce a second one of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays; additionally irradiating the target volume with the second one of the angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays after the time interval in a second session; and repeating said angularly displacing and additionally irradiating a number (n−1) of times to generate the number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays, wherein the number n of angle-variable intersecting microbeam arrays intersect substantially only within the target volume.
 5. The method of claim 4, wherein the disease or condition is one of multiple sclerosis, Devic syndrome, Balo disease, Marchiafava-Bignami disease, central ponitine myelinolysis, adrenoleuodystrophy, schizophrenia, macular degeneration, fibrosis, diseases of the bone, atrial fibrillation, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, pain, and psychiatric disorders.
 6. The method of claim 4, wherein at least one of an X-ray radiation source and the subject are angularly displaced by an angular interval of at least twenty (20) degrees between adjacent sessions.
 7. The method of claim 6, wherein the time interval between adjacent sessions is in a range of between about two hours and eight hours, and the method further comprises administering the adjacent sessions over at least a twenty-four hour period.
 8. The method of claim 1, the method further comprising administering at least one of external stem cells and immune cells to the target area.
 9. A method of delivering a therapeutic dose to selected cells in a target volume for treating a subject for atrial fibrillation, the method comprising: irradiating selected cells within a target volume of a subject with at least one microplanar beam having a therapeutic dose sufficient to ablate myocardial cells in an atrial wall without causing necrosis in a microvasculature system of the atrial wall; said irradiating comprising rotating the subject during said irradiating around an axis produced by an intersection of the microplanar beam with the atrial wall.
 10. The method of claim 9, wherein the at least one microplanar beam comprises an array of microplanar beams comprising at least two parallel, spatially distinct microbeams. 